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01-08-2003, 12:29 AM | #11 | |
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Hi scigirl
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My stupid question: Why doesn't dk want to reply to me? Joel |
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01-08-2003, 08:16 PM | #12 | |||||
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dk: The Bible says in John 8:32, “....the truth shall make you free.” I don’t want to drag the Bible into this discussion, except to say the OT became the NT, and the NT renders unto Caesar those things that are Caesars, and to God the things that are God’s. I come from a school that subscribes to both faith and reason held in tension, not contempt. What the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights is today doesn’t interest me so much, what it becomes in the future concerns me a lot. Christianity, Islam and Judaism share the same root that has become an essential aspect of Western Civilization. From the perspective of Human Law, the source of human rights follows from the 10 Commandments, 12 Tablets of Rome, Greek City/States, Justinian Code, Magna Carte and U.S. Declaration of Independents. Modern hawks, doves, tyrants and demagogues can justify war and human slaughter with mind numbing rationalizations. I find war by and large unpersuasive, but recognize the horrors of war bring clarity to the Truth, and I do find Truth persuasive. I submit governments and nations don’t set people free, the truth makes people free. In a democratic republic, the lengths to which opinion makers, bureaucrats, courts and elected officials go to distance themselves from truth determines whether the law becomes a weapon or a tutor. But make no mistake, in any case the law whether moral, secular, humane or scientific regulates conduct from authority with power. My liberty ends where the freedom of others begins, so even the deontological most punitive laws of the OT protect the rights of people, and gave meaning to what people suffer. What does it mean? Answer: It means Israel not only survived but prospered across the millennium throughout the entire world under the protection of the Law. I submit what the Jews endured and overcame through their faith has become the basis of human dignity that inspired the concept of IHR originate. Quote:
I think the plethora of “isms” that arose out of the 1800s, especially nationalism, were a human response to the void created by a world conscribed to a material image. In the 20th Century humanism became secularized and hostile to a spiritual reality. John Holyoake coined term around 1850 to dogmatism the proposition, “natural morality apart from atheism, theism, and the Bible are sufficient to govern human conduct”. We seem to agree secularism, whether materialistic, scientific or humanistic contains inadequacies. I got lost when went off ranting about the Dark Ages. My point is that what appears to be a practical solution for the problems of the day, often becomes tomorrow’s nightmare. In 1914 imperialism seemed a good idea to the nations of Europe (well France and England agreed it was a good idea for them, but a bad idea for Austria and Prussia), in the 1920s Sovietism seemed a good alternative to the carnage of WWI. in 1928 capitalism seemed a great idea to Wall Street, in 1933 the national socialist party (NAZIS) seemed a great idea to humiliated Germans,,,, and so forth and so on. Quote:
I think its fair to say secularists dismiss religious forms as transcendental moonshine, only to replace the “opiate of the masses” with mind candy, happy pills, and broken promises. If purely materialistic, humanistic and scientistic doctrines are superior then its difficult to explain the crimes communism committed in the name of scientific socialism and scientific history. “It (communism) claimed the lives of an estimated 100 million men, women, and children, brutalized tens of millions more, and ruined the lives of countless others. The Communist record offers the most colossal case of political carnage in history,” writes Martin Malia in the foreword of The Black Book of Communism (Harvard University Press, 1999); it is a “tragedy of planetary dimensions.” ----- Remembering Communism and Counting the Victims Even today there are many intellectuals that rationalize and romanticize about command style communism as if it were a noble social experiment that got a bad rap from the neo-conservative bourgeoisie. I don’t mean to bang on communists unfairly, obviously laissez-faire capitalists, robber barons and multi-national corporations have committed their share of crimes against humanity. The plethora of rationalizations presented by secular historians from every material perspective undermines any claim of “tough scrutiny”. Not the least of which is the widening chasm of economic, educational and social disparity that haunts the USA on the heels of the Great Society. Reason alone can explain what made the Epoch Greek Tragedies so epoch and tragic, but for a resolution to the tragedy that accompanies material forms people are forced to look beyond themselves for answers. Quote:
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01-08-2003, 08:29 PM | #13 | |
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So does that mean the UN code wins by default? scigirl |
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01-08-2003, 08:51 PM | #14 | |
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Quoting someone out of context, is pretext. I thought you were brighter than that. |
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01-08-2003, 09:09 PM | #15 | |
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01-08-2003, 11:12 PM | #16 | |||||
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Hi dk,
Thanks for the reply. To cut things short, the UN DoHR does not go back to the Bible. Christians like to claim that Western civilisation is based on the Judeo-Christian ethics. They would have been right until the Enlightenment. After that, it is non sequitur. Quote:
The whole world bar a few fundamentalists have realised the irrationality and silliness of the first, second, third and fourth commandments. We've also realised that the fifth, seventh, ninth and tenth commandments are useless as commandments, but if they are to be any good, they must be maintained out of integrity and free will, and there are exceptions to the "rule". That leaves us with the sixth (thou shall not kill) and eighth commandments (thou shall not steal). Both of these are also generally correct, even as hypocritical Christian seek the death penalty and funding for faith-based initiatives. I think you are reading far too much into everyone's posts, btw. Quote:
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Joel P.S. Clue: Make sure the your sentences follow logically on from the first. i.e. "Without God" what happens? Does it follow that "all things become commodities"? Where is your evidence for this? Where does the notion of "sacred alter [sic] of progress" come from? Your own perception of humanists, or from humanists? What evidence do you have to support this? Second sentence: "secularism in any pure form" - what does that mean? Is this your own straw man or a real definition? "Closes people to reason" - how, why, when, where? Have you been reading any of the posts in this thread? etc. P.P.S. After your last reply to me, may I ask, have you met Amos? You two will get along just fine. I don't debate with him because he has exactly the same knack at pulling non sequiturs out of a hat as you do. But at least he's fun to read. |
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01-11-2003, 07:02 PM | #17 | ||
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Hey Joel,
I’m going to break my response up. You probably won’t want to respond to some shoots. I agree aspects of our discussion veered off-topic on tangents. Quote:
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01-12-2003, 09:27 PM | #18 |
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Hi dk,
What exactly does this have to do with the OP? If you like, this thread might be better moved ot C-SS. In the meantime, the growing rationality that became part of the Enlightenment as was developed in it was not a Judeo-Christian ethic. It is however, the basis of scientific progress, and of methodological naturalism. The belief that humanity could progress was also a product of the Enlightenment, and against Biblical ideas. Remember the fallen nature of mankind and the Tower of Babel? But anyway, perhaps you should start a separate thread. Joel |
01-13-2003, 04:22 AM | #19 | |||||
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Hi Joel,
2 on n Quote:
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Let me enumerate the Commandments briefly, people number them differently.
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01-13-2003, 04:34 AM | #20 | |
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